Kaze Hikaru


Kaze Hikaru is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Taeko Watanabe. Set in the bakumatsu period, the story follows Tominaga Sei, a young girl who poses as a boy named Kamiya Seizaburo so she can join the Mibu-Roshi. She befriends her sensei, Okita Sōji, who discovers her secret.
The manga began its serialization in Shogakukan's Bessatsu Shōjo Comic magazine in 1997, later transferring to Monthly Flowers magazine. Shogakukan collects the individual chapters into tankōbon under its Flower Comics imprint. In North America, the manga is licensed in English by Viz Media, originally serialized in their Shojo Beat magazine from July 2005 to September 2006 and currently published in print and digital volumes.
In 2003, Kaze Hikaru received the 48th Shogakukan Manga Award for the shōjo demographic. The series has been well received by manga critics, who praised its historical background, art, and characters. It has sold over six million copies and has been named among the best-selling weekly manga series several times in Japan.
In November 2019, Monthly Flowers announced that Kaze Hikaru will go on a hiatus and then end on May 28, 2020.
In May 2020, after the conclusion of the series, a spin-off series was announced and would begin serialization on November 28, 2020.

Plot

Kaze Hikaru takes place in the 1860sin the Japanese historical period known as bakumatsuand revolves around a girl named Tominaga Sei who joins the Mibu-Roshi. She disguises herself as a boy by shaving her hair and joins the group using the name Kamiya Seizaburo. Her primary goal is to seek revenge against the Chōshū clan, who are responsible for the murder of her brother and father. Over the course of the series, Sei realizes that she has found a new family within the Shinsengumi troupe.

Characters

; Tominaga Sei
; Okita Sōji
; Hijikata Toshizō
; Kondō Isami
; Saitō Hajime

Media

Manga

Written and illustrated by Taeko Watanabe, Kaze Hikaru began its serialization in Shogakukan's Bessatsu Shōjo Comic magazine in 1997 and ended its serialization on May 28, 2020. It transferred to Shogakukan's Monthly Flowers magazine in 2002 and has been serialized there ever since. The manga's first tankōbon was released by Shogakukan on October 25, 1997, and the latest volumethe 43rdwas released on June 26, 2019. Shogakukan started publishing the series in bunkoban format on November 15, 2007; it lasted for twelve volumes total, with the final volume released on September 15, 2011. To accompany the manga series, Shogakukan published a guidebook titled on December 12, 2001, and an artbook titled on March 26, 2008, to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the series.
A spin-off series has been announced and will begin serialization in the January 2021 issue of Monthly Flowers on November 28, 2020.
In North America, Viz Media acquired the series rights and published the manga in its female-targeted magazine Shojo Beat, from the first issue in July 2005 until September 2006. Later, it was published in the tankōbon format; the first volume was released on January 3, 2006, and the latestthe 27thwas released on October 1, 2019. Viz Media also licensed a digital version of the manga, starting from June 18, 2013. The manga has also been licensed in Indonesia by Elex Media Komputindo, in South Korea by Haksan Culture Company, in Taiwan by Chingwin Publishing Group, and in Vietnam by NXB Trẻ.

Drama CDs

Kaze Hikaru was adapted into three drama CDs which were produced by Blue Planet in Japan. The first drama CD was released on December 22, 2001, the second was released on October 24, 2003, and the third was released on August 6, 2004. The scripts were written by Azuki Mashiba and the musical score was composed by Koichiro Kameyama. All three drama CDs starred Noriko Hidaka as Tominaga Sei, Yōji Matsuda as Okita Sōji, Tomokazu Seki as Saitō Hajime and Tominaga Yuuma, Takaya Kamikawa as Hijikata Toshizō, and Tōru Ōkawa as Kondō Isami. The majority of the cast was composed of actors from the theater group :ja:演劇集団キャラメルボックス|Caramel Box.

Reception

In 2003, Kaze Hikaru won the 48th Shogakukan Manga Award for the best shōjo manga title of the year. Individual volumes of Kaze Hikaru have been ranked in listings of best-selling manga of the week in Japan; the entire series has sold over six million copies in Japan after the release of the 35th volume in March 2014.
Writing for Manga Life, Ryan Lewis described Kaze Hikaru as "a unique title", praising its engaging story, plot, and characters. Comics Village's Lori Henderson described the manga as "an enjoyable read", and said it is interesting because it shows the history and culture during the Shogunate. It was elected one of the "Most Underrated" manga along with and Saturn Apartments; Eva Volin stated that despite the necessity for the reader to know something about that period of Japanese history, the reader will "fall in love" with the characters "as they deal with the fall of the samurai way and the rise of modern warfare". Pop Culture Shock's reviewer Katherine Dacey described Kaze Hikaru as "an action-filled drama in the vein of The Rose of Versailles or They Were Eleven", and she praised the political nature of the series because Watanabe discusses the gender constraints in Japan. Reviewing the ninth volume, Isaac Hale, also from Pop Culture Shock, commended the series for keeping the same humor that it had at the beginning. Hale said the art was a "high point" of the manga; he described the character designs as "attractive and unique" but he criticized the main character's gender indecision. Matthew Alexander from Mania.com appreciated the story's historical setting and the theme of "a woman in a man's world."
According to Anime News Network's Rebecca Silverman, one of the strengths of Kaze Hikaru is "the meticulous research and fidelity to history that Taeko Watanabe maintains". Silverman praised the manga for being "ich with detail but never overwhelming and full of likeable characters", and said that "this is shoujo that goes just a bit beyond the norm to bring us a story that we can really sink our teeth into". Holly Ellingwood from Active Anime compared the manga to Rurouni Kenshin and Peacemaker Kurogane, and lauded the series for showing the reader the reality of that historical period. Leroy Douresseaux from Comic Book Bin described it as "James Clavell meets Colleen McCullough", and praised Watanabe's artwork, which he said creates "expressive characters and Oscar-worthy costume design". Douresseaux also said the faces of Watanabe's characters "are so captivating that they have a hypnotic effect on the reader", and that it is impossible to not love them.
Sheena McNeil of Sequential Tart called Kaze Hikaru a "fantastic read for any genre", praising its strong female lead, romance, art and comedy. Later, it compared Kaze Hikaru with a novel, and praised the fact that each character has an important role in the series. In a review of Volume 12, Patti Martinson criticized the series for being "soap opera-ish", but said she was still enjoying the characters and the plot. Two volumes later, Holly von Winckel criticized the manga's male characters for looking like women and for its unevenly distributed dialogue balloons. Marissa Sammy said the 15th volume was "far richer in plot and appeal" than earlier volumes. Wolfen Moondaughter said that when reading the 18th volume she felt she was reading three tankōbon, and that there was "a lot packed into this manga".